Biomechanics of Bruxism Potentially Determine the Sites of Severe TMJ Osteoarthritis

Author:

Immonen Jessica1ORCID,Patterson David1,Kent Nathan1,Pipkin Samantha1,Luu Alyssa1,Nguyen Linh M1,Ciccotelli Jason2,James Jeremy1

Affiliation:

1. School of Dental Medicine, University of Nevada Las Vegas, Las Vegas, NV 89106, USA

2. Department of Physical Therapy, University of Nevada Las Vegas, Las Vegas, NV 89154, USA

Abstract

The objective of this study was to assess the osteoarthritis (OA) disease severity in 47 temporomandibular joints (TMJs) using a validated scale for gross signs of OA while noting the specific sites for profound disease on the donor condyle and fossa. A disease severity score of Grade 0–4, representing absent to severe disease, was awarded to each specimen’s condyle and fossa by two blinded investigators who have demonstrated interrater reliability. The mandibular fossa was more pathological compared to the mandibular condyle (* p = 0.001). When the deepest focal lesions were qualitatively assessed, it was demonstrated that the mandibular fossa was more severely degenerated than the articular eminence in 58% of donors. In this subpopulation, 74% of the severe mandibular fossa pathology was seen on the deep articular surface. When the articular eminence was the most severely degenerated region of the fossa, it was equivalently likely to see severe focal lesions on the lateral eminence (35%) or equally distributed across the entire eminence (35%). The greatest disease severity was discovered in sites of overloading, which may be associated with paranormal mandibular movements and potentially bruxism. Patients with bruxism produce significant translational movements (grinding) in the upper joint compartment and heavy vertical loading (clenching). Theoretically, this amplifies pressure and inflammation on the lateral articular surfaces and in the deep fossa.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference31 articles.

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